AV: ur To 2» 6-Piece Nugget. $999 Fries. Your Choice of Dip. Reg. $9.95 .....-+ WE ACCEPT WESTAR, CELGAR & COMINCO MEAL TICKETS inch Pizza Nov yw 5 CQ{ ABRIEL’S CoS 365-602 E DELIVERY "esc. COMMUNITY Bulletin Board ROBSON RIVER OTTER SWIM CLUB Registration, Sunday, April 26, 9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m., Rob: son Hall swimmers please bring photocopy of birth certiticate. Discount Date April 30. For information phone 365-7084 or 365-7842 MISS CASTLEGAR FASHION SHOW Miss Castlegar Queens Committee Spring Fashion Show will be a featured entertainment of the Trade Fair, Sun day, April 26, 1;30 p.m. Meet your 1987 candidates. 3/30 Coming events of Castlegor and District non-profit organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words are $3.75 and additional words are 15¢ each. Boldtaced wor must be used for headings) count as two words. no extra charge for o second insertion while the onsecutive insertion is seventy tive percent and the fourth consecutive insertion is halt-price. Minimum charge is $3.75 (whether ad is for one. two or three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays for Sunday's o p.m. Mondays for. Wednesday's paper Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News at 197 Columbia Ave. COMMUNITY Bulletin Bo Easy Access no Stairs Trail Athletic Association Lic. No. 59147 Friday Nite Trail Track Club vic. no. 58046 Sunday Nite or 365-6172 Champion Bingo H il Upstairs, Trail a Towne Square Mall TONIGHT Wednesday, April 22 GIANT COMBINATION EXPRESS NIGHT cman $6 O in rn? 500 snc coamnwe? 7 OO Fe: vue? OO san Packages $30 which includes all games on our program. LAST GIANT EXPRESS NIGHT TOTAL PAYOUT WAS $4,900. STARS IN TV'S DANGER BAY VANCOUVER (CP) — Blond, blue-eyed Ocean Hell- man says that four years ago she didn't even know movies and television shows were being made in British Col- umbia. But she was only 11 then. Now, she has two movies and a television series behind her. Hellman isa regular on the CBC adventure show Danger Bay, shot on the B.C. coast and now in its third season. Back in 1983, she was doing modelling work while attending school in her home town of Victoria. Hef agency said she should try for a role in the movie Star 80 as the sister of slain Playboy ‘play mate Dorothy Stratton. Hellman didn't get the part, but she went on to other auditions and quickly found herself in a series of productions. She appeared in two made- for-TV movies shot in Van- couver — NBC's The Haunt- ing Passion and ABC's The Best Christmas Pageant Ever as well as the half-hour CBC pilot show Constable John Constable. GOT SERIES Then she won a part on the half-hour Danger Bay as the daughter of aquarium cur ator Doc Roberts, played by Donnelly Rhodes. JOIN US THIS WEEKEND Saturday & Sunday SMORG 932 Columbia Ave., Castlegar Fully Licenced 365-7414 With her hair tied back and wearing jeans and a bulky sweater, Hellman looks more like an average 15-year-old ‘than her demure publicity photo suggests. She has a laugh that verges on a giggle and the energetic expres- siveness typical of a teen- ager. She's happy with Danger Bay and is quick to point out that the show is seen in 23 countries and was rated highly last year on the Dis- ney pay TV channel in the United States. She credits Danger Bay's: popularity to the camaraderie of the actors and crew. “We have what is called a happy set. We have a group of people that are very close and work very well together and that's why I think our show is as successful as it is.” ON NEXT YEAR Danger Bay has been re- newed for next year, a full order of 22 episodes. She adds that she prefers the show to some American TV fare: “If I had my choice between a sitcom in the States and Danger Bay I would choose Danger Bay.” Despite her television ex- posure, Hellman isn't blinded by stars in her eyes. “It’s pictured (as being) very glamorous, but it's by far one of the least glamorous jobs,” she said. “On a series you work 10 to 12 hours a day five days a week for six months. If you count travelling time, it's about 16 to 18 hours (a day).” LIKES FAN MAIL One of the joys of the job is the fan mail — much of it from girls her age and younger. Hellman's future plans are unsettled LEGION BRANCH 170 DANCE SATURDAY 9:30- 1:30 p.m. WESTERN NIGHT Band: “Skip Fraser” Guests must be signed in Proper dress after 9 p.m. Open Monday to Thursday Tla.m. - 1a.m. Friday & Soturde: 12 noon - 2.0.m. 365-7017 acting “Robert s“Restaurant | Hwy. 6, Winlaw SPRING HOURS. Wed -Sat.. 5 p.m.9 pm. Sundays 11.4 m.9.p.m & aM = Si Brunches OPENING MAY 1st 226-7718 » Riverside Dining « Continental Cuisine Menican Specialties Outrageous Desserts _S LICENCED DINING ROOM PEN 4 P.M. DAILY WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED — AIR CONDITIONED — Reservations for Private Parttes — 365-3294 Located | mile south of Weigh Scales in Ootischenia Easy Access no Stairs Thursday, April 24 TRAIL ELKS LODGE Saturday, April 25 TRAIL GYROS Lic. No. 60942 Tuesday, April 28 CNIB Lic. No. 57652 Come and Play the “SUPER PACK’ 60/40 SPLIT TRANSPORTATION PHONE 365-5007 © 365-6172 1060 Eldorado — Trail ex.-Konkin Irly Bird Building | ENTERTAINMENT VICTORIA TEEN SE PUPPET MAGIC . . . Punkerpine Puppets of Calgary will be one of the feature attractions at the annual Castlegar Selkirk Lions Club Trade Fair this weekend. The puppet show will appeal to anyone from three to 60 and is accompanied by lively ragtime music. James Bond turns 25 By BOB THOMAS Associated Press BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — The film world’s most durable star, survivor of uncounted attempts on his life and safety, is.celebrating his 25th anniversary as a box-office attraction this summer. His name? Bond. James Bond. This time the British Secret Service's premier agent faces not only the Soviet KGB and ruthless arms dealers, but also the deadly supplier of the world’s heroin and a flock of free-lance terrorists. The feats may be familiar in The Living Daylights, but James Bond will be new: Welsh actor Timothy Dalton. The worldwide popularity of the previous Bond movies — United Artists claims 1.5 billion tickets sold —, has continued despite changing faces. Dalton’s predecessors as the licensed-to-kill hero have been Sean Connery, George Lazenby and Roger Moore. No one knows more about James Bond than Albert R. (Cubby) Broccoli, who has produced or coproduced 15 Bond movies. Two others, Casino Royale and Never Say Never Again were made by other filmmakers who acquired rights to Ian Fleming stories. Recently at his Beverly Hills mansion the portly, 71-year-old film veteran discussed his life with Bond. In the early 1950s, Broccoli was in England coproducing movies with Alan Ladd and other American stars. Broccoli became interested in filming the Fleming spy novels but found they were owned by a Canadian-born producer, Harry Saltzman. They joined forces in a partnership that lasted nine films. Saltzman had failed to sell American film companies on making a Bond movie. Broccoli decided to try United Artist's top man, Arthur Krim. “Saltzman and I flew to New York and made a deal in about 40 minutes,” the producer recalled. “That's about as quick as you can do it.” Broccoli found his James Bond in a Hollywood pro- jection room. He watched a Disney movie, Darby O'Gill and NOW SHOWING! ‘nasnowina {WED {THU][FRI] 9:00 BOB CATHY voskins TYSON [WI OSAAY ** ‘LETHAL WEAPON’ Is a BANG-ON HIT!”’ Giohe & Malt the Little People, and was impressed by a young Scottish actor named Sean Connery. “At that time he was living in a trailer and was quite badly dressed. We made a deal, but United Artists was not in agreement with us. They wanted us to find someone else. But we had looked at a lot of actors, and Sean was the best.” United Artists agreed to go ahead with Dr. No, imposing a $1-million budget. UA was “shaky” about the film and first released it in drive-ins, said Broccoli. But Dr. No caught on in 1962, especially with collegians. Expectably, Connery wanted a piece of the action, and was cut into the profits with the second film, To Russia With Love. But after Goldfinger, Thunderball and You Only Live Twice, he decided he wanted to pursue other roles. . ‘MY FAULT’ “Then I found this guy George Lazenby; he was my fault,” Broccoli admitted. Lazenby's only Bond movie was On Her Majesty's Secret Service. His lack of charisma prompted United Artists to pay Connery a handsome sum to return in Diamonds Are Forever. After his experience with Lazenby, Broccoli decided to try a more established actor for the next Bond role. He chose Roger Moore, who went on to play 007 seven times, from Live and Let Die to A View to a Kill. “Then Roger decided he wanted to quit, and I felt we needed someone new,” the producer reported. “It was an amicable parting.” Broccoli's choice for The Living Daylights was the classic-trained Timothy Dalton. The Living Daylights will have its world premiere with a royal benefit in London on June 29. It will be released in the United States and Canada on July 31. Wreggitt to read Andrew Wreggitt, co-win ner of CBC's literary com. petition in 1985, will read from his award winning po- etry series, Southeasterly, and from his upcoming CBC radio comedy about the cruise missile, Finder Keep- ers, 8 p.m. Friday at the Student Union Building in Nelson. Wreggitt was born in Sud bury, Ont. and grew up in the small mining community of Fraser Lake in northern B.C He holds a Masters of Fine Arts degree in Creative Writing from UBC, and is now a full-time writer in Calgary. His three collections of po- etry are Riding to Nicola Country, Man at Stellaco River, and his just-published Southeasterly. Champion Bingo Heald yee s528 so Friday, April 24 & Sunday, April 26 wi, $7 50... EACH NIGHT! Regular Card Prices. iia SON UN NI evar He vam —~ Mystery fans, mark your calendars for a treat on Mon- day at 7:90 p.m. at Castlegar branch, National Book Fes- tival is less than a week hor to give a reading in the library. Our distinguished this year is Ted Wood, writer of the popular mysteries, Dead in the Water, Murder on Tee, Live Bait and Fool's Gold, featuring Reid Bennett, | a one-man police department in a small Ontario town. Under the pseudonym, Jack Barnaco, he’s published Hammerlocke, the first in a thriller series with John Locke, a Toronto bodyguard, as protagonist. These mys- teries are exciting, with many plot twists and sur prises, and his characters real and unforgetable. A man of many parts, Wood flew as a flight en- gineer in RAF Coastal com- mand before coming to Can- ada in 1964 to work for three years in the Toronto police force. His experiences as a Toronto cop have given him a personal acquaintance with criminals (though, unlike his detective, he never caught a murderer!). Following that, he worked for several years as creative director for Canada’s three largest advertising agencies, writing and selling short stories on the side and also getting a number of his TV TED WOOD ... at library plays produced by the CBC. After going freelance, he started on his mystery thrill- ers, winning Scribner's Crime Novel award for Dead in the Water, which has since been translated into many languages. Currently, while still working on his Reid Bennett adventures, he’s em- ployed as manager of creat- ive services at the Ryerson Polytechnical Institute. This brief biography dem- onstrates that Ted Wood is energetic, to say the least, and has a fund of fascinating and amusing stories to share. His presentation, spon- sored jointly by National Book Festival, and the li- brary, will be held in the Castlegar Branch (at rear of Pharmasave buildi and is Beet 'n Onion. Safeway. $4.1] As CAMPBELL’S TOMATO SOUP Limit of 6 fins with Family Purchase. 284 mi Tin .. free and open to the public. New Hill Street clone LOS ANGELES (CP) — First there was Hill Street Blues. Then Hill Street at the hospital (St. Elsewhere) and Hill Street at the high school (The Bronx Zoo). Now, with the new ABC series Mariah, there's Hill Street at the prison. Television has a knack for cannibalizing its own suc- cesses, indiscriminately us- ing a new approach until it becomes a cliche. But on the Cable 10 TV surface, at least, Mariah sounds like an idea that suits its formula. Shot in Toronto by Alli- ance Entertainment Corp., the series stars John Getz — familiar from The Fly, Blood Simple and ABC's MacGrv- der and Loud — as the chief superintendent of Mariah State Prison. An ensemble cast of lesser-known perfor- mers support Getz in this series about the effects of a prison on both the people who work in it and the small town in which they live. “There are multiple char- acters, and it is somewhat structurally like Hill Street SHAW CABLE 10 TV Thursday, April 23 5:30—Senior Novice Hoc: key — Spokane takes on Castlegar in this game played at the Beaver Valley Arena March 22. 6:30—Uniroyal Junior Curl- ing — Canada takes on Switzerland in draw six of the Uni- reyal World Junior Curling held in Es- quimalt, commentat- ed by Keith Dagg and Glen Jackson. 9:15—Robin Hood — The students on Woodland Park school present their version of Robin Hood. 11:00—Sign-off. Note: This schedule will be repeated on Friday begin- ning at 9 am. and Sunday beginning at 1 p.m. and St. Getz said, “but a large portion of this is outside the prison. “It is Mariah the town, and the workers being subjected to the pressures of who they are and what they do.” Certainly a prison and a prison town contain rich pos- sibilities for drama. And while most TV viewers do not spend their days in such BATHROOM TISS Purex. Assorted. 2 ply, 8-Roll Pkg: $3.18 ig the prob- lem of bringing the job home exists for almost-everyone. SEEKS REALISM “The intention is to be very realistic,” says executive pro- ducer Gerald Isenberg. “We hope to bring a very real sense of what that kind, of life is like — having a family, wanting to go to a ball game, yet working every day under the jeopardy of those cir- cumstances.” reservations 104 No. Garden St. 206)671-7828 Bellingham, WA 98225 ] close to downtown, Western Washtngton University SUMMER STOCK & fine dining. ynt’s y CATE FEATURES NAT'L SECRETARY WEEK April 20 - 24 DAILY SPECIALS THROUGHOUT THE WEEK Made especially for secretarys! YOU'LL RECEIVE A FLOWER WITH EVERY SPECIAL PURCHASED. BUSINESS HOURS 3 Sp.m. LOCATED IN THE MARLANE HOTEL 330 Columbia Ave., Castlegar Red Mountain Charity Sponsored CASINO Hosted By Fri., Sat. & Sun. 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. each night P ds to S At Riverside Casino fe BLACKJACK] fe ROULETTE | 1060 Eldorado St., Trail Gr jing Program 7:30 p.m. Red Mountain Ski Club Annual Spring Meeting Thurs., Apr. 30 HI-DRI NAPKINS White. Package of 120 = ae . : % P00 G. ORG osc netr : HOT HOUSE: TOMATOES B.C. Grown No.1 Grade. $3.28 xs Aprit 22, 1987. C A. SAUSAGE 51 COTTAGE CHEESE . Lucerne. Creamed or 2% * 750 mi. Tub $1. OVENJOY BREAD White or 60% Whole Wheat 450 G. Sliced Loaf sheacctepeeaapesnses CHICKEN MANURE At the Ski Lodge Prices effective through Saturday, April 25 in your friendly, courteous Castlegar Safeway Store. CLOSED SUNDAY Mon. to Wed. and Saturday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday Friday 9a.m.to9p.m. 10a.m.to 5p.m. We reserve the right fo limit sales to retail quantities. Prices effective while stock fostst CANADA SAFEWAY Limire®